Alphabetical List of Terms

an activity designed to encourage active engagement by learners in an online environment. It will typically involve some kind of interaction/co-operation.The term was coined by the Australian academic Gilly Salmon.

the identification, development, organisation, or utilisation of educational resources. It is commonly used in a more limited sense to describe the use of ICT, equipment-orientedtechniques or audiovisual aids in educational settings.

a term in sociolinguistics, introduced by Basil Bernstein (1924-2000), which refers to a style of language marked by its formal, explicit, and complex features. It contrasts with restricted code. Because the education system makes much use of elaborated code, it is suggested that those who have difficulty in using elaborated code will struggle to cope generally.

the term used in North America for primary schools. It was also used in the past in the UK for schools which covered the age range from 5 to 14, particularly in industrial areas. Elementary education was also a term used for primary education.

the ability to perceive, assess and monitor one's own and others' emotions, including the ability to empathise, motivate, and influence. It features in the work of Howard Gardner (b. 1943) and has been popularised by Daniel Goleman (b.1946).

terms from the work of Jerome Bruner (b.1915) on childdevelopment: the enactive stage is largely equivalent to Piaget's sensori-motor stage; the iconic stage is where understanding is influenced more by visual and auditory development; and the symbolic stage where abstract thought becomes possible.

a philosophical movement of the 18th century characterised by an emphasis on human reason and science rather than on tradition and beliefs. This rationalism had a considerable influence in politics, economics, and religion (see
modernity).

a learner-centred approach that emphasises higher order thinking skills, including analysis, problem solving, discovery and creative activities, both in the classroom and the community. Most importantly, in enquiry learning learners are responsible for processing the data they are working with in order to reach their own conclusions.

one of the fundamental democratic values. It is a highly contested term which refers to a state of correspondence - the state of being equal - in quantity, degree, value, status, or ability. In education, it is most often linked to issues around equality of provision and of outcomes. It is often synonymous with justice or fairness and so to the avoidance, or removal, of discrimination (see numerical equality, proportional equality, equal opportunities)

the study of causation, of why things occur. Etiological issues are important in educational research when trying to pick out key factors in some phenomenon, or in discriminating between causation and mere correlation. For example, a study may struggle to determine if reading for pleasure activity contributes to reading ability, or if it is reading ability that leads to more reading for pleasure. As with many etiological issues in education, the answer may not be clear-cut.

teaching and learning which involves a transactive process between teacher and learner, focused on direct experience. It covers a wide range of approaches from those of John Dewey (1859-1952), to outdoors education, active learning, and environmental education.

an approach which focuses on creativity and performance on the part of learners. Learners may communicate what they have learned through the expressive arts - music, drama, dance, for example, and be assessed in those terms.

a term used for universityteaching or courses offered to students not in full-time study. In Latin, the words mean 'beyond, or outside the walls' so it also sometimes refers to study away from campus or an institution.

descriptive of activities which fall outside the formal curriuclum. Such activities may include optional lunchtime and afterschool clubs and societies, for example. Some dispute the term but it can be useful for distinguishing learning which is beyond the compulsory core (see informal curriculum)